Express & Star

Hundreds of cheating offences at Staffordshire University

More than 350 Staffordshire University students have been found guilty of academic misconduct in two years with offences including cheating in exams and buying professional essays.

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Out of 364 cases between 2014 and 2016 a total of 56 were of the most serious nature, which automatically means the culprit fails the particular module concerned.

Staffordshire University, which has around 12,000 students, stated the numbers were in line with what other establishments were seeing, but they have since hired Dr Thomas Lancaster, an expert in plagiarism and contract cheating, who is spearheading a wider campaign against unruly students.

In an interview with the Express & Star, he said: "The number of cases has gone down due to better support and education of students. All of the numbers are within reasonable boundaries. It is still a very small percentage of students doing this.

"There is more awareness of plagiarism than there was a few years ago. Plagiarism is by far the most common form, exam cheating is another that happens a lot."

While there are clear consequences for culprits, there is no realistic deterrent to people professionally writing and selling essays to students. Academics and ministers are now lobbying to outlaw the practice.

Dr Lancaster added: "We have got involved in looking at the problems and working with the student body. We are trying to get students to work with us and want to raise awareness of the consequences."

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